This is my current obsession. Many if not most cases of rapid economic growth take place under undervalued currencies. Look for example at the cases of China and India in the accompanying charts. But the phenomenon is much more general, and extends to other countries as well. The question is wh...

I have been spending much of this week (well sort of; those who know me better know that I have had much more important things to take care of this week...) teaching in an executive program that the Center for International Development at Harvard runs for economists at the World Bank and other...

Not at all clear, according to Guillermo Calvo. I am sitting at a colloqium on Argentina organized by my colleague Federico Sturzenegger. Argentina has recovered nicely from its crash and has been growing at Asian rates since. Calvo thinks this is just a process of recovery: the country is only ...

Obviously, these informative words were made by a professional. I find them helpful, as I make reasonable essays online by myself. I am going through this post and thinking of it’s theme and trying to understand what is this post about. At last I can have found something from this material which feels pretty good.
uk writer

Today's NYT magazine has a long, touching story on migration and remittances, focusing on the experience of the Philippines. While acknowledging the huge material gains migration generates, the article emphasizes the human costs--broken families, left-behind kids. Off the sala is a guest bedr...